Amnesty International released its latest
broadside against Israel on Thursday, accusing the Jewish state of
committing genocide in Gaza. The nearly 300-page report—“‘You Feel Like You Are Subhuman’: Israel’s Genocide Against Palestinians in Gaza”—is typically mendacious.
Laden with hyperbolic hostility and
“proof” gleaned from bogus Hamas data, it portrays Israel’s defensive
war against the Iran-backed terrorists as the deliberate attempt by a
villainous regime in Jerusalem to annihilate a whole population of
Palestinians.
Talk about the inversion of reality—par
for the course with the “human-rights organization” that makes a mockery
of its mandate. In truth, every accusation in this polemic masquerading
as research could and should be directed at Hamas.
Indeed, every word of the
diatribe-disguised-as-research could and should have been penned about
Hamas. According to Amnesty’s summary of the document, “International
jurisprudence recognizes that the perpetrator does not need to succeed
in their attempts to destroy the protected group, either in whole or in
part, for genocide to have been committed,” since “the commission of
prohibited acts with the intent to destroy the group, as such, is
sufficient.”
Uh, yes. Hamas failed to achieve its
genocidal goal prior to, during and since Oct. 7, 2023. But the will was
and still is there.
There’s antisemitic irony for you.
According to Amnesty’s own definition, both the acts committed and the
intent behind them meet the criteria for genocide.
So as not to be called out for its blatant
bias against Jews, Amnesty employs a not-so-neat trick. The ploy is as
old as it is transparent: Only mentioning the “atrocity crimes committed
… by Hamas and other armed groups against Israelis and victims of other
nationalities, including deliberate mass killings and hostage-taking”
in order to stress that the above “can never justify Israel’s genocide
against Palestinians in Gaza.”
This sleight of hand allows Amnesty to
claim that Israel is engaged in a “campaign of systematic extermination
in Gaza, marked by the deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure,
medical facilities and evacuation routes.”
To support its ludicrous lies, Amnesty
relies on sources aligned with the Islamic Republic’s aim of wiping
Israel off the map. Predictably, the report disregards Israel’s
exhaustive efforts to minimize civilian casualties in Gaza—a Herculean
challenge given the terrorists’ deliberate use of civilians as shields
and cannon fodder.
None of this is surprising. For the better
part of two decades, Amnesty has been fixated on singling out Israel
for condemnation.
In February 2022, Amnesty labeled Israel
an apartheid state. This term, originally associated with South African
segregation, has been misappropriated by anti-Israel activists to paint
the Jewish state as inherently racist.
Amnesty ignored the active participation
of Arab citizens in Israeli society, from serving in the Knesset to
holding prominent roles in medicine, academia and law. It omitted the
historical context behind Israel’s security measures, designed to thwart
relentless waves of Palestinian terrorism, and distorted the legal and
political realities on the ground.
During “Operation Protective Edge” against
Hamas in 2014, Amnesty accused Israel of grave violations of
international law. Overlooking substantial evidence of Hamas’s use of
schools, hospitals and mosques as weapons depots and command centers,
Amnesty decried Israel’s defensive measures. It issued reports lamenting
civilian casualties and damaged buildings while downplaying Hamas’s use
of densely populated areas to provoke such tragedies.
Meanwhile, Amnesty remained silent on
Hamas’s brutal treatment of its own people, including executions of
alleged “collaborators” and the forced recruitment of child soldiers.
Nor did it acknowledge Israel’s unprecedented measures to warn
civilians—via phone calls, leaflets, and “roof-knocking”—before
conducting strikes.
The aftermath of “Operation Cast Lead” in 2008-09 prompted a similarly warped narrative. Amnesty’s report “22 Days of Death and Destruction”
portrayed Hamas as a minor player, rather than a bloodthirsty terrorist
group that had fired thousands of unprovoked projectiles into Israel.
During the Second Intifada (2000-2005),
when Palestinian suicide bombers attacked buses, cafés and nightclubs,
Amnesty directed its ire at Israel’s counter-terrorism measures, such as
the construction of a security barrier to reduce attacks on innocent
Israelis.
Despite Israel’s complete withdrawal from
Gaza in 2005, forcibly removing every last Jew from the Strip, Amnesty
continues to describe the enclave as “occupied.” The pattern is
undeniable: Amnesty seizes every opportunity to vilify Israel.
Founded in 1961 by British lawyer Peter
Benenson to advocate for prisoners of conscience, Amnesty won a Nobel
Peace Prize in 1977 for its defense of human dignity and a United
Nations human-rights prize the following year. Once lauded for
impartiality, it has devolved into a slanted advocacy group with a
pernicious agenda.
Amnesty’s animus toward Israel transcends
politics. Naturally. Considering the existence of the Jewish state to be
illegitimate means never having to care about the ideological makeup of
the ruling coalition in Jerusalem.
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